Just to be clear, this is not the same as what I suggested. Dry firing at home is an excellent way to practice your trigger pull, but you won't be able to catch yourself flinching until you're actually shooting live rounds with one empty chamber.

However, when you do dry fire at home try placing coin on the top of the barrel. Practice your full trigger pull this way without moving the coin.

i disagree. as loong as your paying attention(perhas even having your honey watch you) you can very easily see or feel if your making mistakes such as flinching or jerking.

__________________I have been a silent witness
to all of America's finest hours.
But my finest hour comes
when I am torn into strips and used as bandages
for my wounded comrades on the battlefield,
When I fly at half-mast to honor my soldiers,
Or when I lie in the trembling arms
of a grieving mother
at the graveside of her fallen son.

I'll agree with you both. I'm almost certain I do flinch. At least I pull the barrel when I pull the trigger. The gun was brand new and the trigger is pretty stiff. I fell asleep last night, I'm going to play with it in a little bit. The gun I mean.

I'll agree with you both. I'm almost certain I do flinch. At least I pull the barrel when I pull the trigger. The gun was brand new and the trigger is pretty stiff. I fell asleep last night, I'm going to play with it in a little bit. The gun I mean.

How many rounds do you think you have through it so far?

__________________
Scott

Quote:

If you're not representing Jesus in a way that makes people want to hang out with you, you're doing it wrong.

Quote:

Those who refuse to participate in politics shall be governed by their inferiors. -Plato

About 150-200. Only been twice to the range so far. I have it right now. It was harder than I thought when I actually paid attention to how steady I had to keep my sights. Way different than my semi auto

About 150-200. Only been twice to the range so far. I have it right now. It was harder than I thought when I actually paid attention to how steady I had to keep my sights. Way different than my semi auto

That's for sure. I'd be careful loosening up the trigger too much. That trigger is all the safety you have, and the SP101 is definitely a carry gun.

__________________
Scott

Quote:

If you're not representing Jesus in a way that makes people want to hang out with you, you're doing it wrong.

Quote:

Those who refuse to participate in politics shall be governed by their inferiors. -Plato

With a 357 it's real easy to push as you pull the trigger. Another thing you don't want a soft rubber stock. Magnums shoot better with wood or hard plastic stocks. Don't shoot a lot of rounds with 357 ammo. Usually after 24 rounds I am pushing when I shoot a magnum handgun.

Pick something small like a light switch and dry fire it a lot. You want the sight to still be on the light switch after you pull the trigger. The dry firing will help you a lot with the pushing. Dry firing will only smooth the trigger out in double action. It will not lessen the trigger pull and make the gun unsafe.